Media releases

  • Brock professor releases documentary on 25th anniversary of Yonge Street Riot

    MEDIA RELEASE: – 1 May 2017: R00088

    Feeling marginalized and targeted, a part of the population reaches its breaking point and takes to the streets in protest.

    It sounds like something that could have taken place today, but Thursday, May 4 marks 25 years since the Yonge Street Riot took place in downtown Toronto.

    “With anti-black police violence and Black Lives Matter in the news 25 years later, now was the time to revisit the events of May 4, 1992 along with its social and historical context, political aftermath and relevance for contemporary struggles against anti-black racism,” says Simon Black, Assistant Professor in the Centre for Labour Studies at Brock University.

    The Yonge Street Riot started as a rally organized by the Black Action Defense Committee with about 1,000 people protesting against the Rodney King verdict and the shooting death of a 22-year-old black man by Toronto police a few days earlier.

    They marched to City Hall, with a handful of protestors causing damage, and then the group grew as it marched along Yonge Street, where things escalated.

    “Many, including police and politicians, called it a riot. Others, myself included, think of it more as a rebellion, an uprising,” Black says. 

    After writing an article about the event, Black was encouraged to produce a documentary to mark the 25th anniversary.

    The film, It Takes A Riot: Race, Rebellion, Reform, will be released in a screening Thursday, May 4 at 6:30 p.m. at Ryerson University. The screening will take place in room LIB 72. It’s free and open to the public, but space is limited.

    A second screening will take place at the Niagara Artists Centre in late May, and the film will eventually be housed on Ryerson’s Akua Benjamin Legacy Project website along with an instructors’ guide and other resources for teaching and learning.

    Black says the documentary asks the question: ‘What does it take for black people to get justice in this society?’
     
    “While media coverage of the day focused on property damage, it was the confrontation of young people with the police that tells the true story of May 4,” he says. “Police were shooting and killing black people with impunity in the City of Toronto, never mind the daily indignities suffered by black people as they were racially profiled and harassed by police.

    “Not much has changed. The question remains: why must things reach a crisis point before government addresses systemic anti-black racism?” says Black.

    Black co-wrote the film with Howard Grandison, who also directed. The two, along with Assistant Professor of Social Work at Ryerson Idil Abdillahi, produced the film. It was funded by The Akua Benjamin Legacy Project at Ryerson and the Social Justice Research Institute at Brock.

    “The story has been told in poetry, literature and has received some scholarly attention but not nearly enough,” Black says.

    Simon Black, Assistant Professor in the Centre for Labour Studies at Brock University, is available for interviews.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:
     
    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high definition video and broadcast-quality audio.

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Historic photos from Brock collection part of AGO and ROM exhibits

    MEDIA RELEASE: 27 April 2017 – R00087
     
    The photographs are simple. And yet the stories behind the subjects in them are incredibly complex.
     
    A collection of photographs from Brock University’s Special Collections and Archives are being featured in a pair of high-profile exhibits at the Art Gallery of Ontario and the Royal Ontario Museum.
     
    The photographs are part of a remarkable collection donated to Brock University by Rick Bell in 2010. It features more than 300 photos and various papers spanning more than a century that document the Bell and Sloman families, who descended from former slaves in the American south.
     
    Julie Crooks, the AGO’s Assistant Curator of Photography, found the collection on Brock’s Digital Repository.
     
    “As a photography historian I was thrilled to discover Rick Bell’s archives in the Brock Collection,” she said. “The collection reflects Canadian history, Black-Canadian history and a history of photography. I think both the AGO and ROM exhibitions are deeply enhanced with the inclusion of the rich images from the Brock Collection.”
     
    David Sharron, Brock’s Head of Special Collections and Archives, was happy to work with Crooks on the project.
     
    “It’s always a thrill to see people using our collections in new and innovative ways,” he said. “When we got this collection in 2010 we knew it was really significant. It shows a little bit of the black community in St. Catharines from about the 1870s all the way up into the 1980s. So it’s a really fantastic view of a family over time.”
     
    The AGO exhibit entitled Free Black North, which opens Saturday, April 29 and runs until Aug. 20, shows how historic Black Canadian communities used photography as a tool to explain their complex histories.
     
    Crooks is also one of the curators on The Family Camera, an exhibit running at the ROM from May 6 to Oct. 29. It uses family photographs as a way to tell the story of migration — not just with families escaping the American south, but of those moving to new locations around the world.
     
    A digitized photograph of Richard and Iris Bell is part of the Family Camera’s online slide show while some of the originals will be on display at the museum.
     
    “These were just family photos, but they also show photography as art and as history that wasn’t quite written down,” Sharron said of the Rick Bell Family Collection. “It shows what was important to them and what their families were like.”
     
    In addition to the AGO and ROM displays, an additional photo from the collection is being used by the Black Creek Pioneer Village as part of an exhibit on Canada’s 150th anniversary.
     
     
     
    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:
     
    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970
     
    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high-definition video and broadcast-quality audio.
     
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    Categories: Media releases